Back Acres: Building the Garden Terrace and Lower Rock Retention Wall

in #ecotrain6 years ago (edited)

In a previous post I mentioned that a garden terrace was being added beside the cabin - and that terraces are like flat steps on a hillside with retention walls to help keep the vertical part of the step from being washed down the hill with a heavy rain. Back Acres: Making an A-Frame Level for Staking the Garden Terrace Contour Line.

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A tractor path was flattened to bring field row rocks to the garden terrace construction site from the large pile of farmer's field row rocks that follows the forest's edge all the way up the hill of the valley. Back Acres: Constructing a Tractor Path to bring Field Rocks - for the Garden Terrace Retention Walls.

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This garden will be for growing vegetables, herbs, and berries for the family. Creeping wild strawberries or herbs will be grown on the outside of the terrace field rock retention wall.

Digging the First Rockwall Row Trench

  • First a small trench is cut with the pickaxe for the first row of lower retention wall rocks to lay in.

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  • Small rocks are removed from the first row trench so the first row rocks don't teeter on them when being placed.

Laying the Corner Stone and First Row

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  • The large rocks should lean towards the inside of the wall - not the outside. With the heavier side of the rock towards the inside. Larger rocks that create a close-to-flat wall top are selected for each row of the terrace retention wall. Rocks are wedged together to help keep them from moving towards the outside of the wall - whenever possible.

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  • Small rocks are placed behind the larger rocks if needed for stabilization and to slow dirt from pushing through the larger rocks. The smaller rocks are placed on the inside of the rock wall so they are not easily pulled out like they would be on the outside of the wall.

Movement of Earth to Create the Terrace

  • A drop off is cut along the row of stakes to create an upper drop off. The dirt is brought down to the rock wall until level with the new row of rocks.

Terrace Uppercut

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Pick Axe and Garden Rake Combination

  • A pickaxe to loosen the dirt - then the use of a garden rake to pull the dirt down to the inside foot of the new rockwall row.

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The Rows Continue

The rows for the rock wall continue to be added until the desired retention wall height is reached, and the top of the rockwall is level.

Terrace Construction Visitors

During the week of 6 hours of random work on the garden terrace leveling and lower retention wall construction - I had a few visitors.

A Cousin and family came out for a visit. I was happy to show my Cousin's husband what I was working on - and tell him about the plan.

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One of the cats strolled by for a visit. I have to plant the garden soon so he doesn't think this is a litter box for him.

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My Son and his friend to provided a gravel sifter framed-up photo b0mb :)

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The High Speed Terrace Construction Video

Below is the video of the week of the spuratic 6 hours of garden terrace and rock retention wall construction that has been speed up to be condensed to 14 minutes. A lot of airplanes fly over the lake apparently - they can be heard throughout the video.

Downhill view of the Garden Terrace - Before and After:

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Uphill view of the Garden Terrace - Before and After:

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Next up for the terrace is the garden leveling, irrigation ditch trenching, soil improvement, seeding, transplanting, and upper retention stonewall construction.

Have a Great Day!

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a good honest days work! hard work too !

Have you ever considered using tyres? i have retained a 30 foot drop over a length of 50 feet in one week with tyres and dirt .. they were finally all covered with mud plaster with 10% cement and hold up extremely well!! IF you do its good to put a plastic membrane under the tyres just to ensure there is zero leaching into the soil..

nice job jack

Thanks Alex - I'll have to check on tire sources, i've never looked into what the scrap yards do with the tires around here. I can think of a coldframe green house project where they would work well. I've considered the earth bags, have enough on hand for a small project.

Really cool! I remember seeing the first post, so it's great seeing how it turned out. Nice job!

Thanks - I'll be transplanting and seeding into it by the end of this weekend too - looking forward to it filling :)

Wow, you did quite a fantastic job at making the terrace. :)

Thank you - it was time well spent :)

Very nice! I cant wait to see how the garden looks! I bet it is lovely. The terrace wall already looks picturesque...

Thanks - we've been looking over the garden layout plans the past couple of days, transplanting and seeding this weekend :)

This is very cool. When I saw the picture at the title of the post, I thought it was a cemetery. Then I saw the title of the post and I realized what was really going on :) It looks like you put a ton of work into this. The end result is very impressive though. Thanks for sharing the process. Also very cool that you did it all by hand and didn't use any excavating equipment.

Nicely done, thank you for sharing. It will look even better once full of growing plants.

Thanks @synergysteem - and you're welcome - it was fun seeing the footage and this phase of the project all come together. It will look nice when it's all green :)

Wow you must feel accomplished after, that garden bed is huge. Where did you get the stones from, were they already near by? seems like a lot of work to move all of the stones! Looks nicer than most wooden terraces.

The field rock rows are about a football field away. I'd say the pickaxe and raking of the dirt was the most physically demanding part of the project. I'm very happy with how the rock wall turned out :)

I love the video. I kept waiting for some help to show up but you are a one man army! Good job. Looks great!

Thanks - one of my buddies did offer to help, but he was only out for a few hours and i was in relax mode .. One project at a time - this homestead will submit to the swing of the pickaxe (or other useful tool :)

i'll upvote ya when my VP gets higher. this is super cool! i love that you're doing this and making such a greatly detailed post!! :D i have some plans to stack some stones to make walls and borders. we don't have land this steep, but i still think retaining walls are super cool so may find a reason to make one here eventually :)

Thanks - my neighbors up the hill and up the road made rockwalls that go along the road. Would work well for making raised bed gardens too :)

Hey @jackdub, looks good! I know these projects take lots of time. I am working on teterrace project myself. Will make an article once it's on the way. For now I have posted 2 articles about survival esentials. Would be interested in what you think: The Big 3: https://steemit.com/survival/@juozas/the-big-three-survival-article-snail-challenge-and-128012
and Water: https://steemit.com/survival/@juozas/proven-water-treatment-methods-survival-article

Participate in Snail Challenge!

Just found you, Follow!

There's a @preppersonline group on discord, they do a weekly prepper group post curation, lots of knowledgeable people on there that would be interested in seeing your posts too..
https://discord.gg/255Td3q Looking forward to checking out your terrace post too :)

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